Hardback : $120.00
Bridging feminist and cultural studies, the book shows how British and American women poets often operate as cultural insiders. Individual chapters reassess major figures (H.D., Gwendolyn Brooks, Sylvia Plath), alternative modernist poets (Edith Sitwell, Stevie Smith), and contemporary poets (Ai, Carol Ann Duffy).
Marsha Bryant
CinemaScope Poetics: H.D., Helen, and Historical Epic Film The Poetry Picture Book: Stevie Smith and Children's Culture Uneasy Alliances: Gwendolyn Brooks, Ebony, and Whiteness Everyday Ariel: Sylvia Plath and the Dream Kitchen Killer Lyrics: Ai, Carol Ann Duffy, and the Media Monologue Key Notes: Manifesto for Women's Poetry Studies
Show moreBridging feminist and cultural studies, the book shows how British and American women poets often operate as cultural insiders. Individual chapters reassess major figures (H.D., Gwendolyn Brooks, Sylvia Plath), alternative modernist poets (Edith Sitwell, Stevie Smith), and contemporary poets (Ai, Carol Ann Duffy).
Marsha Bryant
CinemaScope Poetics: H.D., Helen, and Historical Epic Film The Poetry Picture Book: Stevie Smith and Children's Culture Uneasy Alliances: Gwendolyn Brooks, Ebony, and Whiteness Everyday Ariel: Sylvia Plath and the Dream Kitchen Killer Lyrics: Ai, Carol Ann Duffy, and the Media Monologue Key Notes: Manifesto for Women's Poetry Studies
Show moreCinemaScope Poetics: H.D., Helen, and Historical Epic Film The Poetry Picture Book: Stevie Smith and Children's Culture Uneasy Alliances: Gwendolyn Brooks, Ebony, and Whiteness Everyday Ariel: Sylvia Plath and the Dream Kitchen Killer Lyrics: Ai, Carol Ann Duffy, and the Media Monologue Key Notes: Manifesto for Women's Poetry Studies
"Women's Poetry and Popular Culture is a fascinating investigation of the place of women's poetry in contemporary culture. In Bryant's far-reaching study, 'women's poetry' is not just a grouping of poems, but a field, a market, and a cultural conception within and against which individual poets must write. Bryant's style is edgy, her claims provocative, and her reading of poems compelling. She asks 'what a new women's poetry studies would look like' and insists it must be panoramic like the poetry itself, and like this book." - Karen Jackson Ford, Professor of English, University of Oregon, USA "Women's Poetry and Popular Culture is an invigorating tonic which disturbs deep-seated assumptions about women's poetry as necessarily outside and in opposition to culture, and about poetry, generally, as elite and marginal. With brash intelligence and deep care for how poems work, Bryant demonstrates the lively, dynamic interplay between contemporary women's poetry and the rich, provocative domain of popular culture." - Elizabeth Bergmann Loizeaux, Professor of English, University of Maryland, College Park, USA
Marsha Bryant is Professor of English at the University of Florida, USA, where she is a three-time Teacher of the Year for the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. She is the author of Auden and Documentary in the 1930s and the editor of Photo-Textualities: Reading Photographs and Literature. Bryant was the recipient of a fellowship from the National Endowment for the Humanities and contributed to The Unraveling Archive: Essays on Sylvia Plath and Approaches to Teaching H.D.'s Poetry and Prose. Bryant is also an Associate Editor for Contemporary Women's Writing.
"Bryant (Univ. of Florida) offers a lively interrogation of
'women's poetry' situated within and outside of constructions of
popular, contemporary Western culture. Coalescing the poetry of
H.D., Stevie Smith, Sylvia Plath, Gwendolyn Brooks, and Carol Ann
Duffy with the complexities of a mainstream market comprising
domestic advertising, juvenile literature, film, and tabloid
journalism, Bryant's provocative work refutes historical
conceptions of women's poetry as oppositional to popular culture.
Rather, this refreshing fusion of feminist and cultural studies
probes the dynamics of women infusing popular culture with poetry
written by 'cultural insiders' to chronicle this delicate and
complex interplay of popular culture and women's poetry. Summing
Up: Essential. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty." -
CHOICE 'Fact: These days, the most exciting academic work on
nineteenth- and twentieth-century poetry is being done by women
critics and scholars .The most recent example of such scholarship
comes from P&PC hero and University of Florida English
professor Marsha Bryant. They are studying poetries in the plural
(not Poetry) as cultural forces and as ways of thinking linked both
to the everyday and the ideal, with sources in mass, popular, and
counter cultures, computers and archives, transnational circuits of
exchange, and public and political spheres.' - Poetry and Popular
Culture
'In her coda, Bryant envisions a new relationship between poetics
and cultural studies. She argues that critics should not only
analyze the popular contexts that inform women's poetry, but also
the early cultural studies texts that 'often articulate a poetics
of popular culture.' In each of her chapters, Bryant models the
ways that this type of inquiry necessitates the interpretation of a
wide range of cultural texts. In its scope and method, Women's
Poetry and Popular Culture is a vital contribution to women's
poetry studies and postwar poetry studies.' - Tulsa Studies in
Women's Literature 'Byrant's book ultimately calls for a
significant widening of the women's poetry canon broader acceptance
of a range of themes by women poets and a more sophisticated set of
reading pratices that take into account this writing as not simply
oppositional, parodic, or critical . . . At once a monograph and a
manifesto, Women's Poetry is irreverent, immensely readable, and,
frankly, a lot of fun.' - Twentieth-Century Literature "She
[Bryant] effectively illustrates that poetry and popular culture
are interconnected and should be studied in relation to one another
. . . Bryant's close readings of the poems and strong supporting
evidence make it difficult to find a weakness in Women's Poetry and
Popular Culture. The book strikes a good balance between formal
literary criticism and cultural studies while mostly remaining
accessible to readers who may not be familiar with each of the many
literary,feminist, and cultural studies theorists with whom Bryant
is in conversation." - Women's Studies
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